I am aware that I need to give both electronic items a clean-out but I find the idea a little scary. At the back of my mind a voice whispers, "Suppose you lose something vital and never, ever, get it back?" The perfect photo, the only memory-jogger of a beautiful day, the address of a friend that I will irrevocably lose contact with if I fail to e-mail. And yet our ancestors, even ourselves only fifteen years ago, fared very well without so much electronic information. We took a few snaps on film, printed them off weeks, or even months, later, binned the dross and kept a handful. We wrote letters to or telephoned our friends and kept an address book.
What I want to do is go through all these photos, upload all the special ones to photobox and get prints, and then arrange them in the pages of an artistic scrapbook, or at least an album. I don't want my children to say, "Where are all the pictures of our childhood?" and to have to confess that they are stored as zeroes and ones on a hard-drive in a landfill somewhere. The thing is that the task is now so huge that I don't know where to start and when I find a period of free time, I don't feel like trying to climb this mountain.
Processing my thoughts is germinating an action plan, always a good thing!
1) I will sort out the 220 photos on my phone, deleting the rubbish and filing the good.
2) I will consult my albums to find out how old the children are in the last pictures I carefully mounted.
3) I will upload all the really good pictures that are worth keeping. I mean really worth keeping. While I want a pictoral record for myself and the children of our lives together, do any of us want to trawl through endless photos? No, just a few to illustrate and remind. I hope that our memories are full!
4) I will put some money aside next month to get them all printed, maybe in the little books that photobox do, especially as they are sometimes 3 for 2.
5) I will refer back to my action plan when I am feeling overwhelmed.
5) I will refer back to my action plan when I am feeling overwhelmed.
6) I will do a little at a time.
Sorted!
And here are the pictures from our Bank Holiday day out to the Tower of London. There's even one of me!
And here are the pictures from our Bank Holiday day out to the Tower of London. There's even one of me!
3 comments:
lovely to see a picture of you Gaynor!
A beautiful mama with her gorgeous brood!
Oh--and I get *totally* overwhelmed with all my photos, too, with all the same agonizing thoughts...just so you know you're not alone.;-)
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